Transcription of CLIMATE RESILIENCE - HUD
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}
Office of Economic RESILIENCE Office of Community Planning and Development Department of Housing and Urban Development Natural disasters are occurring more frequently and are increasingly severe. All levels of government, individual households, and businesses are shouldering the high cost of disaster recovery. Communities are looking for new ways to become more resilient to these changes and challenges. Planning for severe weather and other CLIMATE changes increases the safety of neighborhoods and improves a community s ability to recover quickly after an event, reducing losses and costs. While disasters are expensive for everyone, they have the most devastating effects on low- and moderate-income families and households without the personal resources to bounce back.
emergency shelters in Monroe County would be below sea level; a 3-foot rise (standard in vulnerability assessments), $31 billion of real estate and public investments in Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Monroe Counties would be inundated. The Prosperity Plan considers a variety of water management
Domain:
Source:
Link to this page:
Please notify us if you found a problem with this document:
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}